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Home Celebs Chris Tucker
Well-known for his trademark rapid-fire wisecracks, actor-comedian Chris Tucker broke into movies in the mid-1990s, following a successful career in stand-up. After his scene-stealing turn in director F. Gary Gray’s 1995 cult comedy hit “Friday,” Tucker took on the role of his career as Jackie Chan’s comic foil and partner in the action-comedy, “Rush Hour” (1998). Thanks to the worldwide success of “Rush Hour,” Tucker became the fastest actor ever to make Hollywood’s elite “$20 Million Club” – a princely sum he received for appearing in the 2001 sequel....

Filmography

Gangsta M.D. - ( - Cast / / Announced / )
Money Talks 2 - ( Producer / / Announced / )
Money Talks 2 - ( Franklin Hatchett / / Announced / )
Trouble Man - ( - Cast / / Announced / )
Rush Hour 3 - ( Dectective James Carter / 2007 / Released / )
Rush Hour 3 - ( Song Performer / 2007 / Released / )
Rush Hour 2 - ( Song Performer / 2001 / Released / )
Rush Hour 2 - ( Detective James Carter / 2001 / Released / )
Rush Hour - ( Detective James Carter / 1998 / Released / Alliance Releasing )
Jackie Brown - ( Beaumont Livingston / 1997 / Released / Alliance Releasing )
Money Talks - ( Executive Producer / 1997 / Released / )
Money Talks - ( Franklin Hatchett / 1997 / Released / )
The Fifth Element - ( Ruby Rhod / 1997 / Released / JVC Entertainment Inc )
Dead Presidents - ( Skip / 1995 / Released / )
Friday - ( Smokey / 1995 / Released / )
Panther - ( Bodyguard / 1995 / Released / REP )
House Party 3 - ( Johnny Booze / 1994 / Released / )
TV Credits
Eddie Murphy: The Making of Delirious ( 2007 / Released ): Actor
The 2007 MTV Movie Awards ( 2007 / Released ): Actor
The 38th Annual NAACP Image Awards ( 2007 / Released ): Actor
African American Lives ( 2006 / Released ): Actor
A Concert for Hurricane Relief ( 2005 / Released ): Actor
The 36th Annual NAACP Image Awards ( 2005 / Released ): Host
America Beyond the Color Line ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
The 2002 Billboard Music Awards ( 2002 / Released ): Actor
The 33rd Annual NAACP Image Awards ( 2002 / Released ): Actor
The Heroes of Black Comedy ( 2002 / Released ): Actor
1st Annual BET Awards ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
A Comic Rush With Chris Tucker ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Jackie Chan ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
Reel Comedy: Rush Hour 2 ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
The 2001 MTV Movie Awards ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
The 32nd NAACP Image Awards ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
United We Stand ( 2001 / Released ): Actor
The 1999 MTV Movie Awards ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
The 30th NAACP Image Awards ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
The 41st Annual Grammy Awards ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
The Source Hip-Hop Music Awards 1999 ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
12th Annual Soul Train Music Awards ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
Canned Ham: Rush Hour ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
The 1998 MTV Video Music Awards ( 1998 / Released ): Actor
The 1997 MTV Video Music Awards ( 1997 / Released ): Actor
Hangin' With Mr. Cooper ( Released ): Actor
Full Biography (Back to top)

Well-known for his trademark rapid-fire wisecracks, actor-comedian Chris Tucker broke into movies in the mid-1990s, following a successful career in stand-up. After his scene-stealing turn in director F. Gary Gray’s 1995 cult comedy hit “Friday,” Tucker took on the role of his career as Jackie Chan’s comic foil and partner in the action-comedy, “Rush Hour” (1998). Thanks to the worldwide success of “Rush Hour,” Tucker became the fastest actor ever to make Hollywood’s elite “$20 Million Club” – a princely sum he received for appearing in the 2001 sequel. Despite wracking up a prolific flurry of credits at the start of his career, Tucker’s output slowed to a trickle by the early 2000s, limiting his film roles strictly to the “Rush Hour” franchise. Nevertheless, the comedian’s star power remained significant enough to once again command a $20 million payday – against 20% of the gross – for his next film, the inevitable “Rush Hour 3” (2007).

The youngest of six children born to janitorial business owner Norris Tucker, Christopher Tucker was born in Decatur, GA on Aug. 31, 1972. An incorrigible class clown, Tucker first displayed his gifts in a school talent show, where he proved a roaring success. Heavily influenced by Richard Pryor and Eddie Murphy, Tucker wasted no time kicking off his comedy career. Moving to L.A. right out of high school, Tucker quickly gained a following on the comedy club circuit for his high-pitched delivery and manic energy. The young comic’s on-stage act eventually led him to an appearance on “Def Comedy Jam” (HBO, 1992-97), a cable showcase for rising young black comics.

Tucker made his feature debut in 1993 with a small role in “House Party 3,” but it was his co-starring turn in “Friday” which made his career. Cast in the role of the dope-smoking, underachieving sidekick, Smokey, Tucker completely stole the film out from under its star, Ice Cube. Lensed mostly on location in South Central Los Angeles, the film followed 16 hours in the lives of two friends – Tucker and Cube – as they waste the day away, cracking wise and making observations. A sleeper hit, “Friday” took in over $27 million at the box office and spawned two sequels – neither of which Tucker returned for. That same year, Tucker also had a supporting role in the Hughes Brothers’ urban action-thriller “Dead Presidents.”

The year 1997 proved to be a banner year for Tucker as an actor. In Quentin Tarantino’s “Jackie Brown,” Tucker had a small but pivotal role as Beaumont Livingston, a minor associate of Samuel L. Jackson’s charming gun-runner, Ordell Robbie. Tucker then followed-up with another scene-stealing turn as a futuristic D.J. named Ruby Rhod in director Luc Besson’s $80 million sci-fi/action spectacle, “The Fifth Element.” Hot on a roll, the comedian-turned-actor subsequently signed on to appear in the appropriately titled “Money Talks,” an anemic, derivative comedy co-starring Charlie Sheen.

Continuing his success the following year, Tucker broke the bank in 1998 when he was paired with international action star Jackie Chan in “Rush Hour” – the first of director Brett Ratner’s highly profitable East-meets-West action-comedies. Par for the course, Tucker’s character – the fast-talking, motor-mouthed Detective James Carter – was not much of a departure for the comedian, who essentially played it as another version of his Smokey character. While some criticized the movie for being a “Lethal Weapon” rip-off, “Rush Hour” was a major hit, raking in over $140 million domestically – and nearly double that overseas. Not bad for a flick that only cost New Line Cinema a relatively paltry $35 million.

Surprisingly, just as he was the peak of his box office popularity, Tucker retreated from moviemaking altogether. After turning down several film offers, Tucker finally returned in 2001 for “Rush Hour 2.” Despite a four-year absence from the big screen, Tucker received a much publicized $20 million payday for the sequel. Following the huge success of “Rush Hour 2,” Tucker once again dropped off the radar; this time, for a full six years. While his two self-imposed exiles likely did not help further his career, neither did they particularly hurt it. In fact, to hear Tucker tell it, the sabbaticals may have been just what the comedian needed to keep his grounding. Revealed Tucker in a candid 2003 interview: "When I started traveling, I started finding out around the world [that] people don’t have clean water, how much we’re so spoiled in America because we have so much. It made me stop thinking about myself as much." Traveling to Africa, Tucker saw first-hand the devastation that poverty, AIDS and hunger could inflict. The experience proved life-changing for the actor, who later set up a foundation in his name to help children in Africa attain the basic necessities of life. Thankfully for fans of the Chan-Tucker franchise, in 2007, Tucker returned to reprise his signature role in “Rush Hour 3.” Released in the U.S. on Aug. 10, 2007, the third installment opened at #1, taking in $50.2 million in its opening weekend.


Profession(s):
Actor, comedian, producer, cleaning person
Sometimes Credited As:
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Family
father:Norris Tucker (owned a janitorial service)
mother:Mary Tucker (involved in the church)
son:Chris Tucker Jr (born in September 1998)
Awards (Back to top)
ShoWest Comedy Star of the Year 2002
MTV Movie Award Best Onscreen Duo "Rush Hour" 1999

Milestones (Back to top)
2007 Returned to the screen after a six year hiatus to once again co-star with Jackie Chan for "Rush Hour 3"
2001 Reprised role in sequel "Rush Hour 2"
1998 Teamed with martial artist Jackie Chan for the box-office hit "Rush Hour"
1997 Stole the show from Bruce Willis with his gender-bending turn as Ruby Rhod, a flamboyant 23rd-century talk-show host, in Luc Besson's "The Fifth Element"
1997 Hooked up with Charlie Sheen as Eddie Murphyesque hustler Franklin Hatchett in "Money Talks"
1995 Starred opposite Ice Cube in the surprise hit "Friday"
1995 Had memorable death scene in "Dead Presidents" (overdosed on heroin while watching a vintage "Soul Train" telecast)
1993 Feature debut as Johnny Booze in "House Party 3"
1992 Network TV debut as a rapper on the ABC sitcom "Hangin' With Mr. Cooper"
1992 Stand-up work on TV's "Russell Simmons' Def Comedy All-Star Jam" (HBO) landed him his first feature (date approximate)
Grew up in Decatur, Georgia
Left Atlanta to move to L.A.


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